Sentences with phrase «as postdocs move»

This results in high turnover within the postdoctoral association as postdocs move on to the next step in their career.
As postdocs move from one short - term contract to another, they can find it increasingly difficult to find posts that offer funding to more experienced researchers.

Not exact matches

I noticed that after your postdoc appointment, you moved to industry, where you have held several roles of increasing responsibilities, and your work focuses on [same research topic as me].
«It's definitely important to reduce the postdoc period to get people moving on to their next career spot, especially if they're doing a postdoc as a default.
Her main focus has been studying how the central nervous system develops in embryos: in frogs as a graduate student, then in mice as a postdoc at Duke University starting in 1997, and later at U.C. San Francisco when her lab moved to the Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center there in 1999.
But for the thousands of postdocs employed on NIH PI grants, prospects under the CR looked much less certain as NIH announced plans to fund grant renewals below their original amounts, «generally up to 80 % of the previously committed level,» according the NIH Web site — a move that would put intense pressure on principal investigators to economize.
A Bridge to Independence 3 February 2006 Despite a tight budget, NIH is moving forward with a plan to help as many as 200 postdocs each year establish their own labs.
«We had high - school and college - age students with grad students and postdocs in the lab, and they were each sharing experiences, educating each other as to how to go from that specific part of their lives and move on to the challenges of the next phase, both scientifically and personally,» she says.
Odds are, however, that things will move slowly, so an early start to the job search will serve to minimize the number of weeks you spend cooling your heels as a «postdoc» in your graduate adviser's lab.
After a few years as an Assistant Professor, someone told me about a free book «Making the Right Moves: A Practical Guide to Scientific Management for Postdocs and New Faculty».
Despite a tight budget, NIH is moving forward with a plan to help as many as 200 postdocs each year establish their own labs.
In 2002, he moved to Edmonton, Canada, to serve as a postdoc at the University of Alberta.
«The big thing about the act,» says Sethna, «is that it takes away a lot of the anxiety over the postdoc's immigration status as he or she moves toward the permanent visa, or green card.»
As they plan their move, students and postdocs «should familiarise themselves with the regulations in the discipline in that country» by looking at relevant websites, seeking information from mentors, or even getting in touch with the local consulate, Nath suggests.
Clues as to my next move came during my editorial career; as the well - known editorial assistant in the biology department, I had often been approached by PhD students and postdocs to look over their CVs and application letters to check the grammar and spelling.
For Clark, doing one or two postdocs and then moving on to something else «needs to be seen as healthy and productive,» not a failure as it is so often perceived at present.
Investment in personal development and career enhancement while individuals are in postdoc positions will clearly benefit a university if an individual stays in academia — but it should also be seen as a university's contribution to national well - being if a postdoc chooses to move out of academia to pursue other opportunities.
There are so many spectacular examples of individuals moving on to industry, government, teaching, start - up companies, the media, and elsewhere after a 2 - or 3 - year postdoc «leavening» following their Ph.D. that it is surprising that others do not see this as a most attractive route for career enrichment.
«In the US I could have tried to apply for grants while still working as a postdoc, and I would have moved to an independent position once I had some money secured.
She joined HHMI in the spring of 1995 as a program officer and has since moved through the ranks to senior officer in charge of several fellowship programs for graduate students and postdocs.
I first met Thomas 2 years earlier, during my Midwest postdoc from hell, and as soon as I knew where I was moving, I sent him an e-mail.
Following her postdocs, she worked as a Senior Research Scientist at Clark Atlanta University before moving to the Department of Pharmacology at Howard University College of Medicine as an Assistant Professor where she is currently on tenure track.
As I wrote in my first Next Wave article, I was deciding between continuing along the academic path — doing a postdoc and applying for faculty positions — and moving over into industry and accepting a research or management position there.
However, IF they decide to move forward (most postdocs will be getting the minimum; there are only a few colleges / institutes left), UMich will provide some bridge funding as an incentive.
After her postdoc, Chefetz moved to the University of Michigan to work as a research fellow with oncologist Ron Buckanovich.
After that I moved to Innsbruck as a Postdoc at the Medical University, from 2004 to 2006.
After a postdoc with Thomas Graf and a junior faculty position at the EMBL Heidelberg, he was recruited as research director on the associate professor level by the French national research agency CNRS and moved to the Centre d'Immunologie de Marseille - Luminy (CIML) in Marseille, where he has been a principle investigator since 1999 and was promoted to research director on the full professor level in 2009.
He stayed there for another 18 months as a postdoc before moving to Zurich, Switzerland, to continue his postdoc with Konrad Basler.
As with many postdoc positions, is a fixed - term, temporary assignment, after which she plans to move back to her «real» home (outside California).
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